The public API of the `BaseRetriever` class in LangChain is as follows:

```python
from abc import ABC, abstractmethod
from typing import Any, List
from langchain.schema import Document
from langchain.callbacks.manager import Callbacks

class BaseRetriever(ABC):
    ...
    def get_relevant_documents(
        self, query: str, *, callbacks: Callbacks = None, **kwargs: Any
    ) -> List[Document]:
        """Retrieve documents relevant to a query.
        Args:
            query: string to find relevant documents for
            callbacks: Callback manager or list of callbacks
        Returns:
            List of relevant documents
        """
        ...

    async def aget_relevant_documents(
        self, query: str, *, callbacks: Callbacks = None, **kwargs: Any
    ) -> List[Document]:
        """Asynchronously get documents relevant to a query.
        Args:
            query: string to find relevant documents for
            callbacks: Callback manager or list of callbacks
        Returns:
            List of relevant documents
        """
        ...
```

It's that simple! You can call `get_relevant_documents` or the async `aget_relevant_documents` methods to retrieve documents relevant to a query, where "relevance" is defined by
the specific retriever object you are calling.

Of course, we also help construct what we think useful retrievers are. The main type of retriever that we focus on is a vector store retriever. We will focus on that for the rest of this guide.

In order to understand what a vector store retriever is, it's important to understand what a vector store is. So let's look at that.

By default, LangChain uses [Chroma](/docs/ecosystem/integrations/chroma.html) as the vector store to index and search embeddings. To walk through this tutorial, we'll first need to install `chromadb`.

```
pip install chromadb
```

This example showcases question answering over documents.
We have chosen this as the example for getting started because it nicely combines a lot of different elements (Text splitters, embeddings, vector stores) and then also shows how to use them in a chain.

Question answering over documents consists of four steps:

1. Create an index
2. Create a retriever from that index
3. Create a question answering chain
4. Ask questions!

Each of the steps has multiple substeps and potential configurations. In this notebook we will primarily focus on (1). We will start by showing the one-liner for doing so, but then break down what is actually going on.

First, let's import some common classes we'll use no matter what.


```python
from langchain.chains import RetrievalQA
from langchain.llms import OpenAI
```

Next in the generic setup, let's specify the document loader we want to use. You can download the `state_of_the_union.txt` file [here](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/blob/master/docs/extras/modules/state_of_the_union.txt).


```python
from langchain.document_loaders import TextLoader
loader = TextLoader('../state_of_the_union.txt', encoding='utf8')
```

## One Line Index Creation

To get started as quickly as possible, we can use the `VectorstoreIndexCreator`.


```python
from langchain.indexes import VectorstoreIndexCreator
```


```python
index = VectorstoreIndexCreator().from_loaders([loader])
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    Running Chroma using direct local API.
    Using DuckDB in-memory for database. Data will be transient.
```

</CodeOutputBlock>

Now that the index is created, we can use it to ask questions of the data! Note that under the hood this is actually doing a few steps as well, which we will cover later in this guide.


```python
query = "What did the president say about Ketanji Brown Jackson"
index.query(query)
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    " The president said that Ketanji Brown Jackson is one of the nation's top legal minds, a former top litigator in private practice, a former federal public defender, and from a family of public school educators and police officers. He also said that she is a consensus builder and has received a broad range of support from the Fraternal Order of Police to former judges appointed by Democrats and Republicans."
```

</CodeOutputBlock>


```python
query = "What did the president say about Ketanji Brown Jackson"
index.query_with_sources(query)
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    {'question': 'What did the president say about Ketanji Brown Jackson',
     'answer': " The president said that he nominated Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, one of the nation's top legal minds, to continue Justice Breyer's legacy of excellence, and that she has received a broad range of support from the Fraternal Order of Police to former judges appointed by Democrats and Republicans.\n",
     'sources': '../state_of_the_union.txt'}
```

</CodeOutputBlock>

What is returned from the `VectorstoreIndexCreator` is a `VectorStoreIndexWrapper`, which provides these nice `query` and `query_with_sources` functionalities. If we just want to access the vector store directly, we can also do that.


```python
index.vectorstore
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    <langchain.vectorstores.chroma.Chroma at 0x119aa5940>
```

</CodeOutputBlock>

If we then want to access the `VectorStoreRetriever`, we can do that with:


```python
index.vectorstore.as_retriever()
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    VectorStoreRetriever(vectorstore=<langchain.vectorstores.chroma.Chroma object at 0x119aa5940>, search_kwargs={})
```

</CodeOutputBlock>

It can also be convenient to filter the vector store by the metadata associated with documents, particularly when your vector store has multiple sources.  This can be done using the `query` method like so:


```python
index.query("Summarize the general content of this document.", retriever_kwargs={"search_kwargs": {"filter": {"source": "../state_of_the_union.txt"}}})
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    " The document is a speech given by President Trump to the nation on the occasion of his 245th birthday. The speech highlights the importance of American values and the challenges facing the country, including the ongoing conflict in Ukraine, the ongoing trade war with China, and the ongoing conflict in Syria. The speech also discusses the importance of investing in emerging technologies and American manufacturing, and calls on Congress to pass the Bipartisan Innovation Act and other important legislation."
```

</CodeOutputBlock>


## Walkthrough

Okay, so what's actually going on? How is this index getting created?

A lot of the magic is being hid in this `VectorstoreIndexCreator`. What is this doing?

There are three main steps going on after the documents are loaded:

1. Splitting documents into chunks
2. Creating embeddings for each document
3. Storing documents and embeddings in a vector store

Let's walk through this in code


```python
documents = loader.load()
```

Next, we will split the documents into chunks.


```python
from langchain.text_splitter import CharacterTextSplitter
text_splitter = CharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=1000, chunk_overlap=0)
texts = text_splitter.split_documents(documents)
```

We will then select which embeddings we want to use.


```python
from langchain.embeddings import OpenAIEmbeddings
embeddings = OpenAIEmbeddings()
```

We now create the vector store to use as the index.


```python
from langchain.vectorstores import Chroma
db = Chroma.from_documents(texts, embeddings)
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    Running Chroma using direct local API.
    Using DuckDB in-memory for database. Data will be transient.
```

</CodeOutputBlock>

So that's creating the index. Then, we expose this index in a retriever interface.


```python
retriever = db.as_retriever()
```

Then, as before, we create a chain and use it to answer questions!


```python
qa = RetrievalQA.from_chain_type(llm=OpenAI(), chain_type="stuff", retriever=retriever)
```


```python
query = "What did the president say about Ketanji Brown Jackson"
qa.run(query)
```

<CodeOutputBlock lang="python">

```
    " The President said that Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson is one of the nation's top legal minds, a former top litigator in private practice, a former federal public defender, and from a family of public school educators and police officers. He said she is a consensus builder and has received a broad range of support from organizations such as the Fraternal Order of Police and former judges appointed by Democrats and Republicans."
```

</CodeOutputBlock>

`VectorstoreIndexCreator` is just a wrapper around all this logic. It is configurable in the text splitter it uses, the embeddings it uses, and the vectorstore it uses. For example, you can configure it as below:


```python
index_creator = VectorstoreIndexCreator(
    vectorstore_cls=Chroma,
    embedding=OpenAIEmbeddings(),
    text_splitter=CharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=1000, chunk_overlap=0)
)
```

Hopefully this highlights what is going on under the hood of `VectorstoreIndexCreator`. While we think it's important to have a simple way to create indexes, we also think it's important to understand what's going on under the hood.
